Gila Monster
Heloderma suspectum
The Gila monster (Heloderma suspectum) is a heavy-bodied venomous lizard of the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico. It has beadlike scales, a thick tail used for fat storage, and orange, pink, or yellow markings on a dark body. Unlike fast pursuit predators, it moves deliberately and feeds on eggs, nestling animals, small vertebrates, and carrion when opportunities arise. Venom is delivered through grooved teeth during a sustained bite rather than by fangs.
Keeping Gila monsters is restricted or prohibited in many places and should be limited to licensed, experienced reptile keepers or institutions. Secure caging, lockable rooms, heat gradients, dry shelters, seasonal cues, and bite-response protocols are essential. They are not animals for casual handling, and even calm individuals can cause serious injury. Zoos and breeders track locality, subspecies or population background, feeding, brumation, and breeding behavior carefully. In the wild, stewardship includes legal protection, road awareness, and leaving encountered animals undisturbed in desert habitat.
Colors: Banded, Black, Orange, Pink, Reticulated, Wild Type